Sgt. Ikaika Erik Kang was arrested in Honolulu on Saturday and charged with attempting to provide classified military documents and training to the Islamic State, court records unsealed Monday said.

The 34-year-old is an air traffic control operator with the 25th Infantry Division at the U.S. Army Pacific Command. He was under investigation for a year, the records show, and the FBI said authorities arrested him Saturday shortly after he pledged allegiance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and said he wanted to "kill a bunch of people." Court documents say he was referred to the FBI by the Army in August 2016, several years after he began making threatening remarks and pro-ISIS statements.

Kang had the highest level of combat instructor training, the FBI affidavit said, and gave lessons to a person he believed was a member of ISIS, taping their trainings so they could be shown to other ISIS fighters. The FBI also said it searched computer hard drives belonging to Kang, and discovered 18 military documents labeled "Secret," with 16 of those still classified. They also found close to 500 documents that reference ISIS or violence, and 13 issues of al Qaeda's Inspire magazine.

Kang's father, Clifford, told KHNL his son grew up on Oahu and enlisted in the Army after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. He served in Afghanistan, South Korea, and Iraq, and received several commendations. Birney Bervar, Kang's attorney, said he "may have some service-related mental health issues which the government was aware of, but neglected to treat." A preliminary hearing is set for July 24. Catherine Garcia

Cardinal George Pell, Australia's most senior Catholic and the Vatican treasurer, is back in the country to face sexual assault charges.

He arrived at Sydney Airport on Monday. Pell, 76, was granted a leave of absence by the Vatican to defend himself against the charges, the BBC reports. Police said the allegations are based on "historical" incidents reported by "multiple complainants," and Pell will appear in a Melbourne court on July 26. He has denied any wrongdoing, saying last month, "I'm looking forward to having my day in court. I am innocent of these charges, they are false. The whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me." Catherine Garcia

The Bureau of Prisons has begun the process of acquiring at least one new private prison specifically for housing undocumented immigrants,BuzzFeed News reports. "Given Attorney General [Jeff] Sessions' strong focus on a priority for the investigation and prosecution of immigration offenses, we do expect an increase in additional immigration offenders over the weeks and months ahead," said the acting director of the bureau, Dr. Thomas Kane.

The Bureau of Prisons is seeking bids for a prison with up to "9,540 beds." "The population will be low-security adult male inmates that are primarily criminal aliens with ordinarily 90 months or less remaining to serve on their sentences," the notice says.

"We're extremely concerned," the American Civil Liberties Union's deputy director of legislative affairs in Washington, Jesselyn McCurdy, told BuzzFeed News. "We have seen how people have been mistreated, abused, and in many cases, not been given proper medical care and died as a result of being in private prisons."

A woman is on trial this week for laughing during Jeff Sessions' congressional confirmation hearing in January when Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) attested the attorney general nominee had a record of "treating all Americans equally under the law." Desiree Fairooz, 61, is accused of "disorderly and disruptive conduct" that was intended to "impede, disrupt, and disturb the orderly conduct" of the hearing, The Huffington Post reports.

Another protester escorted out of Sessions hearing. Her original offense appeared to be simply laughing. pic.twitter.com/p6lWzBVFRW

Fairooz is an activist associated with the group Code Pink, but she said she had not planned to disrupt the hearing. Writer Elizabeth Croydon dismissed Fairooz's charges on Twitter, claiming "if my hero Desiree Fairooz wanted to make a scene, she would have made a scene. Desiree just had an involuntary reaction to a bogus lie that was told bold-faced in front of the American people. Jefferson Sessions has a record of not treating every American equally."

A rookie officer who had never worked at a congressional hearing or arrested someone before was responsible for arresting Fairooz. On Tuesday, an attorney asked the officer, Katherine Coronado, if Fairooz's laughter was "loud enough to draw your attention" or if it made people turn around. Coronado agreed it had, and said Fairooz had been laughing "very loudly."

In a video of her arrest, Fairooz can be seen expressing surprise at the reaction of the officers. "Why am I being taken out of here?" she wanted to know as she was escorted her out. "I was going to be quiet, and now you're going to have me arrested? For what?" Jeva Lange

Before the mayhem, Trump suggested on Twitter that the "professional protesters" had been "incited by the media" and being "very unfair," but the protesters in some cities were at least as angry at the media. The Portland protesters had largely dispersed by early morning. You can watch raw footage from The Associated Press below. Peter Weber

The woman known as "Jane Doe," who claims she was raped at a party by Donald Trump when she was 13, canceled an appearance at a news conference Wednesday because she received death threats, her attorney said.

Speaking in front of reporters near Los Angeles, Lisa Bloom said the unidentified woman was set to tell her story for the first time in public, but she "has received numerous threats today, as have all the Trump accusers that I have represented. She is living in fear. She has decided that she is too afraid to show her face. She has been here all day, ready to do it, but unfortunately she's in terrible fear."

Jane Doe filed a suit in June alleging that in 1994, Trump raped her at a party in New York City thrown by Jeffrey Epstein, a financier convicted in 2008 of soliciting an underage girl for sex. Doe's original lawsuit was thrown out of a California court in May because it failed to state a specific civil rights violation, BuzzFeed News reports, and it was discovered that the house listed for sending court correspondence was in foreclosure under a different name. Trump's campaign is denying the allegations, with Trump telling Radar Online they are "disgusting at the highest level." Catherine Garcia

Michael Vance, 38, of Chandler was found in Hammon after a resident saw a vehicle thought to be stolen by Vance and investigators discovered a makeshift campsite nearby. After Vance was tracked down, the chase was on, and eventually there was a shootout. One Dewey County sheriff was shot in the arm, and has been hospitalized.

On Oct. 23, officers were called to the scene of a disturbance in Wellston, where they encountered Vance, CNN reports. During a shootout, Vance allegedly shot and wounded two officers, and in an exchange of fire, he was hit at least once. He stole a patrol car and fled, and later is believed to have carjacked a woman, shooting and injuring her. A similar car was then spotted at a home in Luther, and inside authorities found the bodies of Vance's aunt and uncle, Robert and Valerie Kay Wilkson. Vance, who in July was arrested on accusations of child sex abuse, talked about the murders on social media, CNN reports. Catherine Garcia

A jury on Thursday found brothers Ammon and Ryan Bundy, the leaders of an armed group who took over the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge for nearly six weeks earlier this year, and five others not guilty of conspiracy to impede federal workers from their jobs.

Additionally, several of the defendants were charged with possessing a firearm at a federal facility, and they were also acquitted on that count. The standoff began on Jan 2., with the participants claiming it was to protest two local ranchers being sentenced to five years in prison for two counts of arson on federal land. The Bundy brothers still face charges in Nevada, where in 2014 they engaged in another standoff, this time with federal agents who attempted to take their father's cattle after they grazed on public land for years without a permit. Catherine Garcia